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package utf8;

$utf8::hint_bits = 0x00800000;

our $VERSION = '1.10';

sub import {
    $^H |= $utf8::hint_bits;
    $enc{caller()} = $_[1] if $_[1];
}

sub unimport {
    $^H &= ~$utf8::hint_bits;
}

sub AUTOLOAD {
    require "utf8_heavy.pl";
    goto &$AUTOLOAD if defined &$AUTOLOAD;
    require Carp;
    Carp::croak("Undefined subroutine $AUTOLOAD called");
}

1;
__END__

=head1 NAME

utf8 - Perl pragma to enable/disable UTF-8 (or UTF-EBCDIC) in source code

=head1 SYNOPSIS

    use utf8;
    no utf8;

    # Convert the internal representation of a Perl scalar to/from UTF-8.

    $num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string);
    $success    = utf8::downgrade($string[, FAIL_OK]);

    # Change each character of a Perl scalar to/from a series of
    # characters that represent the UTF-8 bytes of each original character.

    utf8::encode($string);  # "\x{100}"  becomes "\xc4\x80"
    utf8::decode($string);  # "\xc4\x80" becomes "\x{100}"

    $flag = utf8::is_utf8(STRING); # since Perl 5.8.1
    $flag = utf8::valid(STRING);

=head1 DESCRIPTION

The C<use utf8> pragma tells the Perl parser to allow UTF-8 in the
program text in the current lexical scope (allow UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC based
platforms).  The C<no utf8> pragma tells Perl to switch back to treating
the source text as literal bytes in the current lexical scope.

B<Do not use this pragma for anything else than telling Perl that your
script is written in UTF-8.> The utility functions described below are
directly usable without C<use utf8;>.

Because it is not possible to reliably tell UTF-8 from native 8 bit
encodings, you need either a Byte Order Mark at the beginning of your
source code, or C<use utf8;>, to instruct perl.

When UTF-8 becomes the standard source format, this pragma will
effectively become a no-op.  For convenience in what follows the term
I<UTF-X> is used to refer to UTF-8 on ASCII and ISO Latin based
platforms and UTF-EBCDIC on EBCDIC based platforms.

See also the effects of the C<-C> switch and its cousin, the
C<$ENV{PERL_UNICODE}>, in L<perlrun>.

Enabling the C<utf8> pragma has the following effect:

=over 4

=item *

Bytes in the source text that have their high-bit set will be treated
as being part of a literal UTF-X sequence.  This includes most
literals such as identifier names, string constants, and constant
regular expression patterns.

On EBCDIC platforms characters in the Latin 1 character set are
treated as being part of a literal UTF-EBCDIC character.

=back

Note that if you have bytes with the eighth bit on in your script
(for example embedded Latin-1 in your string literals), C<use utf8>
will be unhappy since the bytes are most probably not well-formed
UTF-X.  If you want to have such bytes under C<use utf8>, you can disable
this pragma until the end the block (or file, if at top level) by
C<no utf8;>.

=head2 Utility functions

The following functions are defined in the C<utf8::> package by the
Perl core.  You do not need to say C<use utf8> to use these and in fact
you should not say that  unless you really want to have UTF-8 source code.

=over 4

=item * $num_octets = utf8::upgrade($string)

Converts in-place the internal representation of the string from an octet
sequence in the native encoding (Latin-1 or EBCDIC) to I<UTF-X>. The
logical character sequence itself is unchanged.  If I<$string> is already
stored as I<UTF-X>, then this is a no-op. Returns the
number of octets necessary to represent the string as I<UTF-X>.  Can be
used to make sure that the UTF-8 flag is on, so that C<\w> or C<lc()>
work as Unicode on strings containing characters in the range 0x80-0xFF
(on ASCII and derivatives).

B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings.>
Therefore Encode is recommended for the general purposes; see also
L<Encode>.

=item * $success = utf8::downgrade($string[, FAIL_OK])

Converts in-place the internal representation of the string from
I<UTF-X> to the equivalent octet sequence in the native encoding (Latin-1
or EBCDIC). The logical character sequence itself is unchanged. If
I<$string> is already stored as native 8 bit, then this is a no-op.  Can
be used to
make sure that the UTF-8 flag is off, e.g. when you want to make sure
that the substr() or length() function works with the usually faster
byte algorithm.

Fails if the original I<UTF-X> sequence cannot be represented in the
native 8 bit encoding. On failure dies or, if the value of C<FAIL_OK> is
true, returns false. 

Returns true on success.

B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings.>
Therefore Encode is recommended for the general purposes; see also
L<Encode>.

=item * utf8::encode($string)

Converts in-place the character sequence to the corresponding octet
sequence in I<UTF-X>. That is, every (possibly wide) character gets
replaced with a sequence of one or more characters that represent the
individual I<UTF-X> bytes of the character.  The UTF8 flag is turned off.
Returns nothing.

    my $a = "\x{100}"; # $a contains one character, with ord 0x100
    utf8::encode($a);  # $a contains two characters, with ords 0xc4 and 0x80

B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings.>
Therefore Encode is recommended for the general purposes; see also
L<Encode>.

=item * $success = utf8::decode($string)

Attempts to convert in-place the octet sequence in I<UTF-X> to the
corresponding character sequence. That is, it replaces each sequence of
characters in the string whose ords represent a valid UTF-X byte
sequence, with the corresponding single character.  The UTF-8 flag is
turned on only if the source string contains multiple-byte I<UTF-X>
characters.  If I<$string> is invalid as I<UTF-X>, returns false;
otherwise returns true.

    my $a = "\xc4\x80"; # $a contains two characters, with ords 0xc4 and 0x80
    utf8::decode($a);   # $a contains one character, with ord 0x100

B<Note that this function does not handle arbitrary encodings.>
Therefore Encode is recommended for the general purposes; see also
L<Encode>.

=item * $flag = utf8::is_utf8(STRING)

(Since Perl 5.8.1)  Test whether STRING is encoded internally in UTF-8.
Functionally the same as Encode::is_utf8().

=item * $flag = utf8::valid(STRING)

[INTERNAL] Test whether STRING is in a consistent state regarding
UTF-8.  Will return true if it is well-formed UTF-8 and has the UTF-8 flag
on B<or> if STRING is held as bytes (both these states are 'consistent').
Main reason for this routine is to allow Perl's testsuite to check
that operations have left strings in a consistent state.  You most
probably want to use utf8::is_utf8() instead.

=back

C<utf8::encode> is like C<utf8::upgrade>, but the UTF8 flag is
cleared.  See L<perlunicode> for more on the UTF8 flag and the C API
functions C<sv_utf8_upgrade>, C<sv_utf8_downgrade>, C<sv_utf8_encode>,
and C<sv_utf8_decode>, which are wrapped by the Perl functions
C<utf8::upgrade>, C<utf8::downgrade>, C<utf8::encode> and
C<utf8::decode>.  Also, the functions utf8::is_utf8, utf8::valid,
utf8::encode, utf8::decode, utf8::upgrade, and utf8::downgrade are
actually internal, and thus always available, without a C<require utf8>
statement.

=head1 BUGS

One can have Unicode in identifier names, but not in package/class or
subroutine names.  While some limited functionality towards this does
exist as of Perl 5.8.0, that is more accidental than designed; use of
Unicode for the said purposes is unsupported.

One reason of this unfinishedness is its (currently) inherent
unportability: since both package names and subroutine names may need
to be mapped to file and directory names, the Unicode capability of
the filesystem becomes important-- and there unfortunately aren't
portable answers.

=head1 SEE ALSO

L<perlunitut>, L<perluniintro>, L<perlrun>, L<bytes>, L<perlunicode>

=cut

Filemanager

Name Type Size Permission Actions
App Folder 0755
Archive Folder 0755
Attribute Folder 0755
B Folder 0755
CGI Folder 0755
CPAN Folder 0755
CPANPLUS Folder 0755
Carp Folder 0755
Class Folder 0755
Compress Folder 0755
Config Folder 0755
DBM_Filter Folder 0755
Devel Folder 0755
Digest Folder 0755
Encode Folder 0755
Exporter Folder 0755
ExtUtils Folder 0755
File Folder 0755
Filter Folder 0755
Getopt Folder 0755
HTTP Folder 0755
I18N Folder 0755
IO Folder 0755
IPC Folder 0755
JSON Folder 0755
Locale Folder 0755
Log Folder 0755
Math Folder 0755
Memoize Folder 0755
Module Folder 0755
Net Folder 0755
Object Folder 0755
Package Folder 0755
Params Folder 0755
Parse Folder 0755
Perl Folder 0755
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Pod Folder 0755
Search Folder 0755
TAP Folder 0755
Term Folder 0755
Test Folder 0755
Text Folder 0755
Thread Folder 0755
Tie Folder 0755
Time Folder 0755
Unicode Folder 0755
User Folder 0755
autodie Folder 0755
encoding Folder 0755
inc Folder 0755
overload Folder 0755
pod Folder 0755
unicore Folder 0755
version Folder 0755
warnings Folder 0755
x86_64-linux-thread-multi Folder 0755
AnyDBM_File.pm File 2.56 KB 0444
AutoLoader.pm File 15.42 KB 0444
AutoSplit.pm File 19.18 KB 0444
Benchmark.pm File 27.87 KB 0444
CGI.pm File 255.24 KB 0444
CORE.pod File 3.19 KB 0444
CPAN.pm File 134.28 KB 0444
CPANPLUS.pm File 7.06 KB 0444
Carp.pm File 21.49 KB 0444
DB.pm File 18.43 KB 0444
DBM_Filter.pm File 14.05 KB 0444
Digest.pm File 10.45 KB 0444
DirHandle.pm File 1.52 KB 0444
Dumpvalue.pm File 16.5 KB 0444
English.pm File 4.59 KB 0444
Env.pm File 5.39 KB 0444
Exporter.pm File 18.31 KB 0444
Fatal.pm File 43.62 KB 0444
FileCache.pm File 5.44 KB 0444
FileHandle.pm File 6.62 KB 0444
FindBin.pm File 4.45 KB 0444
Memoize.pm File 35.34 KB 0444
NEXT.pm File 18.05 KB 0444
PerlIO.pm File 10.19 KB 0444
Safe.pm File 24.28 KB 0444
SelectSaver.pm File 1.05 KB 0444
SelfLoader.pm File 16.94 KB 0444
Symbol.pm File 4.68 KB 0444
Test.pm File 28.21 KB 0444
Thread.pm File 8.09 KB 0444
UNIVERSAL.pm File 6.97 KB 0444
XSLoader.pm File 11.05 KB 0444
_charnames.pm File 31.02 KB 0444
autodie.pm File 11.66 KB 0444
autouse.pm File 4.14 KB 0444
base.pm File 6.37 KB 0444
bigint.pm File 18.34 KB 0444
bignum.pm File 17.75 KB 0444
bigrat.pm File 13.61 KB 0444
blib.pm File 2.04 KB 0444
bytes.pm File 2.96 KB 0444
bytes_heavy.pl File 758 B 0444
charnames.pm File 19.83 KB 0444
constant.pm File 13.04 KB 0444
deprecate.pm File 3.01 KB 0444
diagnostics.pm File 18.14 KB 0444
dumpvar.pl File 15.24 KB 0444
feature.pm File 11.89 KB 0444
fields.pm File 9.28 KB 0444
filetest.pm File 3.91 KB 0444
if.pm File 1.13 KB 0444
integer.pm File 3.19 KB 0444
less.pm File 3.13 KB 0444
locale.pm File 3.12 KB 0444
open.pm File 7.83 KB 0444
overload.pm File 51.41 KB 0444
overloading.pm File 1.77 KB 0444
parent.pm File 2.83 KB 0444
perl5db.pl File 307.87 KB 0444
perlfaq.pm File 94 B 0444
sigtrap.pm File 7.44 KB 0444
sort.pm File 5.94 KB 0444
strict.pm File 3.84 KB 0444
subs.pm File 845 B 0444
utf8.pm File 7.61 KB 0444
utf8_heavy.pl File 30.22 KB 0444
vars.pm File 2.36 KB 0444
version.pm File 5.16 KB 0444
version.pod File 9.63 KB 0444
vmsish.pm File 4.22 KB 0444
warnings.pm File 20.14 KB 0444
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